BEIJING, March 18 (Xinhua) -- The following is the
full text of the Report on the Implementation of the 2006 Plan for National
Economic and Social Development and on the 2007 Draft Plan for National Economic
and Social Development, which was submitted on March 5 for review by the Fifth
Session of the Tenth National People's Congress:
REPORT ON THE IMPLEMENTATION OF THE 2006 PLAN
FOR NATIONAL ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT AND ON THE 2007 DRAFT PLAN FOR
NATIONAL ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT
Fifth Session of the Tenth National People's Congress
March 5, 2007
National Development and Reform Commission
Fellow Deputies,
The National Development and Reform Commission has
been entrusted by the State Council to report on the implementation of the 2006
plan for national economic and social development and on the 2007 draft plan for
national economic and social development for your deliberation and approval at
the Fifth Session of the Tenth National People's Congress (NPC), and also for
comments and suggestions from members of the National Committee of the Chinese
People's Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC).
I. Implementation of the 2006 Plan for National
Economic and Social Development
Under the leadership of the Communist Party of China
(CPC), the people of all our ethnic groups in 2006 diligently put into practice
major strategic concepts of the Scientific Outlook on Development and building a
harmonious socialist society, followed the plan for national economic and social
development adopted at the Fourth Session of the Tenth National People's
Congress, and accelerated reform and opening up and the modernization drive,
resulting in improved conditions and environment for development, a better
growth momentum and an overall good start to the Eleventh Five-Year Plan. We
took another solid step toward the magnificent goal of building a moderately
prosperous society in all respects.
1. The national economy maintained its development
momentum, characterized by rapid growth, strong performance and relatively low
prices.
Economic growth was fast yet steady. China's GDP for
the year reached 20.94 trillion yuan, up 10.7% from the year before. Economic
development became more stable, with only minor fluctuations in quarterly and
annual GDP growth rates. The consumer price index rose by 1.5% during the year.
Although economic growth rate has remained at or slightly above 10% for four
consecutive years, price rises have been relatively slow and stable, a situation
rarely witnessed in the history of China's development.
The economy performed well. Total government revenue
for 2006 was 3.93 trillion yuan, an increase of 24.3%. Large industrial
enterprises generated 1.8784 trillion yuan in profits, up 31%. Energy
consumption per unit of GDP fell by 1.23%, which is the first drop since 2003.
Water consumption per unit of the added value of industry dropped by 9%.
Figure 1.GDP Growth
Prominent difficulties and problems affecting economic performance were alleviated. Investment growth declined. Total fixed asset investment nationwide increased by 24% for the year, a decrease of 5.8 percentage points from the first half of 2006 and 2 percentage points from 2005. Growth of the money supply and credit slowed. At the end of 2006, the broad money supply (M2) had increased by 16.9% compared with 2005, representing a decrease of 2.1 percentage points from the May-end level and 0.6 percentage points less than the figure for the same period of the previous year. The pressure on tight supplies of coal and electricity and on the overloaded transportation system eased noticeably. Stored coal directly supplied to power plants reached 24.11 million tons at the end of 2006, indicating sufficient supply; installed power-generating capacity increased by 100 million kilowatts; electricity generated annually reached 2.8344 trillion kilowatt-hours, up 13.4%; the number of power lines affected by power outages plus the number of outages was down 97% from the year before, and the total power loss caused by outages was down by 82%; and transportation facilities proved adequate to meet transport demand for grain, fertilizer and other key materials.
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